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Jazz Articles about Ben Neill

649
Interview

Ben Neill: Starting a Dub War

Read "Ben Neill: Starting a Dub War" reviewed by James Taylor


To say that Ben Neill plays the trumpet--the instrument of such jazz legends as Miles Davis and Clifford Brown--is an epic understatement. “I think electronica is like a new form of jazz--it's an instrumental form of music that plays out in popular culture but has musical ideas that go beyond the expectations of pop music," says Neill, a student of the electro-acoustic innovations of Robert Moog and minimalist aesthetic of LaMonte Young. Neill specifically plays the mutantrumpet, a self-designed instrument ...

273
Album Review

Ben Neill: Night Science

Read "Night Science" reviewed by Lyn Horton


Composing an aural atmosphere oozing with timelessness requires a talent for making choices from an infinite array of sound propositions. That talent without doubt lies in Ben Neill, whose Night Science boasts a stunning consistency and coherence in fulfilling of the process of combining electronic and acoustic sounds.

Refining his signature of individuality as he plays the “mutantrumpet," an electro- acoustic instrument of his own design, Neill soars through the musical space. His instrument animates a central character that peeks ...

517
Album Review

Ben Neill: Night Science

Read "Night Science" reviewed by Mark Corroto


Miles Davis certainly smiled on musical innovations. Years ago, to keep up with the latest, all that was required was to check out what the late trumpeter was investigating. With Miles gone, the hunt maybe a bit more difficult, but then again Peter Gordon's Thirsty Ear label, under the creative direction of pianist Matthew Shipp, has been a leader in bringing innovation and ingenuity into an intersection with the jazz world.

Enter trumpeter Ben Neill. Actually, reenter Ben ...

289
Album Review

Ben Neill: Automotive

Read "Automotive" reviewed by Mark Corroto


What’s a car commercial these days without a hip song? And although I’ve never seen Don Henley’s “Deadhead sticker on a Cadillac,” it scares me half to death to see GM appropriating Led Zeppelin’s music to sell the terminally unhip Cadillac dinosaurs. What self-respecting Jimmy Page fan would be caught dead in those Detroit rust buckets? But I digress.

It seems like (although they didn’t) Volkswagen started all this music-sells-cars business. From a wordless “Dah-Dah-Dah” came a consumer ...


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